Sleeping with the Enemy: Google Now for iPhone, iPad

Google has ported its innovative Now user experience to Apple’s iOS devices—iPhone, iPad, iPod touch—via an update to the Google Search app. This is a full frontal assault on Apple’s hype-tastic Siri feature, which also offers voice search.

I think of Google Now as a combination of the type of integrated experiences Microsoft uses in Windows Phone with Google’s vaunted search technologies. If this evolves as expected, it could become a sort of voice-guided digital assistant for your entire life, an uber-OS of sorts that sits at the heart of all computerized interactions. Yes, it has a ways to go, but it’s the real deal, whereas Apple’s Siri is really just a marketing success that doesn’t work well in real life.

“Google Now is about giving you just the right information at just the right time,” Google engineer Andrea Huey writes in a post to the Official Google Blog. “It can show you the day’s weather as you get dressed in the morning, or alert you that there’s heavy traffic … It can also share news updates on a story you’ve been following, remind you to leave for the airport so you can make your flight and much more. There’s no digging required: cards appear at the moment you need them most—and the more you use Google Now, the more you get out of it.”

That last bit is perhaps the most confusing aspect of Google Now for new users. When you first access the interface, it doesn’t appear to do much. But over time, as it kicks in, Google Now can be almost amazingly prescient, alerting you to a late train or whatever. (Privacy purists will also note that Google Now is amazingly creepy in the way that only Google services are, as if maybe it knows a bit too much about you.)

Anyway, check out this short intro video explaining how Google Now works on iOS if it’s still not clear.

Wake up call to Microsoft to get their user services more User centric, and useful.
When I get into my car, for my daily commute, I really need to know the best traffic route. My phone should be able to inform me on this.

The virtual assistant has been a part of Microsoft's ecosystem vision for quite some time now, we've seen it in several concept vids and in the early natal/kinect days, it never really came about w/ kinect gen1 but hopefully w/ infinity or win.next we'll see something combined w/ nui/tellme/bing/etc to make siri and google now look old school

You're right. That's why I put the quotes around the phrase. I still thought it was an interesting article in that it points out that Apple has people thinking of likely questions and making sure the answers make sense even if there is no real answer.

I was able to download it here last night no problem. One annoying thing is that the location services symbol constantly shows. Doesn't seem to drain battery but annoying to have it displayed constantly!